1551 to 1600 (of 2710)
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trustee, did, in the form of commissions and inside information. His brother, Richard Scougall, a branch manager for the bank at Ottawa, purchased the Lyn Tannery in the late 1860s, and with Robert, who
 
whom were also agents of France among the Iroquois. By his own account Chabert went to live among the Iroquois as a young boy, and in the following years he resided for some time among the Ottawas
., Toronto, 1911), 98–109, 124–27. [F.-A. Larocque], Journal de Larocque de la rivière Assiniboine jusqu’à la rivière “Aux Roches Jaunes,” 1805, ed. L. J. Burpee (Ottawa, 1911
 
present” (working paper, Univ. of Ottawa, 1982). P.-G. Roy, La ville de Quebec sous le Regime français (2v., Quebec, 1930), 2: 317–18; “La famille Chinic,” BRH, 45 (1939
-Denis-sur-Richelieu,” Rev. de l’univ. d’Ottawa, 16 (1946): 310–18. Gabriel Nadeau, “Jean Orillat,” BRH, 41 (1935): 653–56.
 
contemporary description (Ottawa, 1966), 14–21. Père Pacifique [de Valigny] [H.-J.-L. Buisson], “Ristigouche: métropole des Micmacs, théâtre du ‘dernier effort de la France au Canada,’” Soc. de
 
(Montréal et Toronto, 1859). Canada Patent Office Library (Ottawa), Canada Patent 1045, Ebenezer Clemo, 27 Jan. 1860; 1148, William Weir, 2
in 1867 was put to political advantage by Coffin: in Ottawa he became identified as a supporter of Macdonald’s government, a position useful for patronage purposes, while at the county level he
 
. Doris Drolet Dubé et Marthe Lacombe, Inventaire des marchés de construction des Archives nationales à Québec, XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles (Ottawa, 1977), 208
 
, 1968). D. W. Thomson, Men and meridians: the history of surveying and mapping in Canada (3v., Ottawa, 1966–69), I. F.-J. Audet, “Trois géographes canadiens,” Soc. de
, described in S. C. Willis, Alexis Contant: catalogue (exhibition catalogue, National Library of Canada, Ottawa, 1982); these include oratorios, a symphonic poem, four masses, and numerous
Library and Arch. Can. (Ottawa), R10875-4-5 (Executive Council Office of the Province of Upper Canada fonds, land submissions), vol.514, petition 8 (Adam Vrooman, 18 April 1793; copy at
inquire into the immigration of Italian labourers to Montreal and the alleged fraudulent practices of employment agencies, Report of commissioner and evidence (Ottawa, 1905), which was published
to women’s auxiliaries in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, and Quebec. She raised $800 in Toronto so that a church could be built at Carcross. Then on 9
(Ottawa), 1907-22. Duff Crerar, Padres in no man’s land: Canadian chaplains and the Great War (Montreal and Kingston, 1995). Middleton, Municipality of Toronto. National encyclopedia
([London, c.1772]). Rapports sur les lois de Québec, 1767–1770, W. P. M. Kennedy et Gustave Lanctot, édit. (Ottawa, 1931), 11
 
at York Mills (Toronto). In the summer of 1872, a year before graduation, he served as a ministerial assistant in Ottawa and Chelsea, Que. Although a polished writer, Dadson showed no aptitude for
 
1767; 24 Oct. 1769; 13 July 1775. PAC, The Northcliffe collection . . . (Ottawa, 1926). Directory of N.S. MLAs. W. B. Kerr, The maritime
 
, 79; May 1982: 36–37; and March 1985: 24–25, 65, respectively; “Darrell, [Arctic guide of the Royal Mounted]” and “De Sainville: forgotten Mackenzie mapper,” North (Ottawa), 20 (1973
that it had used its connections with the Liberal government in Ottawa to reap excessive profits. Yet it also had a powerful supporter in Clifford
 
. J. Tulchinsky, “Immigration and charity in the Montreal Jewish community before 1890,” Social Hist. (Ottawa), 16 (1983): 359–80.
the “reliable members of the profession . . . from Ottawa to Hamilton” to convene them in Toronto on 3 Jan. 1867. Nine men attended the meeting and Day was in the chair; committees were
 
, Bull. (Ottawa), 16 (1977–78), no.2: 22–26. “Le livre de M. Delisle,” BRH, 12 (1906): 255. É.-Z. Massicotte, “La famille de Jean De Lisle de la Cailleterie,” BRH
principal cities of the dominion, where he was warmly received. At a party given in Ottawa at the residence of the governor general, the Marquess of Lorne
 
civil government for Quebec, had drawn the province’s boundary just west of the Ottawa River, and “the Indian country” beyond it remained under martial law, with justice being dispensed by the post
 
(Ottawa et Montréal, 1969), 54, 62–64. P. G. Vangelisti, Gli Italiani in Canada (Montreal, 1956), 63–64. F.-J. Audet, “Les Donegani de Montréal,” BRH, 47 (1941): 66–67
. Tuck, Newfoundland and Labrador prehistory (Ottawa, 1976), 62–76. For discussions on the problems regarding portraits see Ingeborg Marshall, “The miniature portrait of Mary
 
. Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, ms, 1971, Rodrigue Bédard et al., “Catalogue des biens de la ferme Saint-Gabriel.” National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), Files 9977, 15381
, “Le clergé, les notables et l’enseignement privé au Québec: le cas du collège de Sainte-Anne, 1840–1870,” Social Hist. (Ottawa), no.5 (April 1970): 45–65. W. J. Price, “Aux origines
, N.B., 1938). Can., Dept. of Militia and Defence, Militia list (Ottawa), 1914; July 1919. Canadian Journal of Mental Hygiene (Toronto), 2 (1920): 289–90. Megan Davies, “The
in 1893 and an honorary lld from the University of Ottawa in 1895. In 1903 he became a governor of the Université Laval in Quebec City. When he left the Superior Court of
,” Medical Services Journal, Canada (Ottawa), XXIII (1967), 1436–44.
Beauharnois without a garrison. He carried out this mission at the request of the Fox, whose relations with the French were shaky. Afraid of the presence of their enemies, particularly of the Ottawa (Odawa
Nations by treaty, the least the government could do in these times of change and insecurity was to guarantee title to lands already occupied. Ottawa had no intention of depriving the Métis of their
 
, 1897) and Ontario (Ottawa, 1899). In 1895, as a result of the bank crash in Newfoundland [see James Goodfellow*], a branch was
 
Brunswick Museum. Others are held in the Henry Birks Collection of Silver at the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa) and in the Louis Carrier and Gérard Morisset collections
correspondence with the De Salaberry family, never before published, extending from 1791 to 1814, ed. W. J. Anderson (Ottawa and Toronto, 1870). Royal Gazette and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser
. Canada, Indian treaties and surrenders … [1660–1906] (3v., Ottawa, 1891–1912; repr. Toronto, 1971), 2. G. H. Gooderham, “Peter Erasmus,” Alberta Hist. (Calgary), 36 (1988), no.2
Ardsley, Angl., et New York, 1966). Other works, both published and in manuscript, are available at Arch. hist. oblates (Ottawa). A.-A. Taché
gone to Ottawa in 1917 to support the Union government, but the Liberals in Nova Scotia were badly divided, and by 1920 the Unionists had become a noxious embarrassment to the party
Provo William Parry Wallis,’” National Gallery of Canada, Bull. (Ottawa), 20 (1972): 13–21. Harry Piers, “Artists in Nova Scotia,” N.S. Hist Soc., Coll., 18 (1914): 112–19. G
time. But, like Clifford Sifton* and many other prairie politicians, he was vociferously opposed to any attempt by Ottawa to impose
company.) Roderick was soon transferred to Fort Coulonge on the Ottawa River where, during the winter of 1837–38, he was initiated into the company’s mode of trade with natives and lumbermen. The following
opening kick-off at a Canadian Football League exhibition game in Ottawa. On 4 July he met with Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau
Varley*, had been represented. Fripp stated in 1930 that the gallery did not know of a Canada outside of Montreal, Ottawa, and Toronto. As a result of his efforts to promote the province’s artists
questions, especially on the cost of education, colonization, and railways, including the Quebec, Montreal, Ottawa and Occidental, of which Senécal was a director. Gagnon’s speeches bore the stamp of his
(3v., Aberdeen, Scot., 1889–98), 2: 423. Handbook of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, 1883, ed. A. F. Kemp et al. (Ottawa, 1883). Scott et al., Fasti ecclesiœ scoticanœ
awarded contracts for military supplies. Galt served in Ottawa for four years, refused remuneration for this work, and declined a knighthood. Among his
. 1935. Can., Census of Canada, 1890–91 (4v., Ottawa, 1893–97), 3, table no.I: 109; House of Commons, Debates, 9 Sept. 1896: 942–43; 1897: 2565; 1898: 4177–78, 5643–44, 6102–3
 
; Histoire de Saint-François-du-Lac (Ottawa, 1942), 152, 155–56, 203–5, 214. R. C. Dalton, The Jesuits’ estates question, 1760–1888: a study of the background for
1551 to 1600 (of 2710)
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